1 / 26

School/Court Cooperative Programs

School/Court Cooperative Programs. Working Together to Reduce Crime and Improve Education . Types of Programs. Alternative to Suspension Truancy Prevention Information Sharing Reporting Center Alternative to Expulsion Alternative to Detaining Kids in Juvenile Detention Center .

sargent
Download Presentation

School/Court Cooperative Programs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. School/Court Cooperative Programs Working Together to Reduce Crime and Improve Education

  2. Types of Programs • Alternative to Suspension • Truancy Prevention • Information Sharing • Reporting Center • Alternative to Expulsion • Alternative to Detaining Kids in Juvenile Detention Center

  3. Alternative To SuspensionWhy? • Suspension from school means • A Gap in Education • A Punishment of Questionable Value • Student gets a “vacation” • Students are Often Unsupervised During Suspension Period • No Modification of Negative Behavior

  4. Extended Day Programs • Alternative to out-of school suspension • Allows students to attend their regular classes in their home school • Student Day is extended • 6:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. • Attendance is Court Ordered

  5. Court Hearing • School Sends Order to Appear under Signature of Judge • Files Affidavit of Service • Petition for Enforcement of School Rules • Sent to parent and filed with Court • School Prepares Court Order • Sets hearing date

  6. How is a Student Referred? • Referred by the Principal • Reasons: • Repeated or chronic behavior problems • Hall misconduct, late to school, unserved detentions, disruptive classroom behavior • Non-Physical offenses that would result in automatic suspension • Theft, vandalism, possession of electronic device, insubordination, gambling • Students Who Do Not Serve In House Assignments Successfully

  7. Who Attends the Hearing • Student • Parents • Principal or Assistant Principal • Sometimes… • Other agencies involved with family • Translator

  8. What Information Does the Judge Have? • Petition • School Disciplinary Record • Grades • Family Court Information Sheet • Contains prior court involvement of Family Members

  9. Results… LaPorte Community Schools Suspensions

  10. Entrance Date 10/17/02 Reason for Placement Low credits Truancies Frequent In School suspensions Goals To Stay Awake Control Anger Pass My Classes Passing less than half of classes Exit Date 3/14/03 After Completion Steadily Increasing Credits Zero Truancies No In School Suspensions Goals Monitor sheets indicate on task, working hard Behavior no longer a major issue Passed all classes, increased grade point and class rank significantly “John”

  11. Replicating the Program Avoid a “Cookie Cutter” Approach Do What Works for your Students

  12. Alternative to SuspensionMichigan Area Schools Project MAP Middle School Alternative Programming

  13. Project MAP • Michigan City Area Schools, Grades 6-8 • Mainly Urban School District • High Suspension and Expulsion Rate • Funding: • Local Foundations • Want to see problem addressed • Mayor of Michigan City – Riverboat Funds

  14. Truancy Prevention Active in both Michigan City and LaPorte Who Attends? -Parent and student if in 5th grade and above -County attendance officers -School principal -Investigator from Child Protective Services -Probation officer if Middle School student

  15. Goals of Project Attend • Group discussion of the attendance problem • Identify reasons for non-attendance • Enter into contract to improve situation • Inform parent and child of legal consequences of not attending school • Put services into place if necessary • Open up communication between the family and the school

  16. Day Reporting Alternative to Expulsion Located on Grounds of Juvenile Services Center in Portable Classroom Joint Effort Schools and Circuit Court, Juvenile Services Center First Students - April 26, 2004

  17. Staff • One Youth Specialist Worker • One Certified Teacher • Working in conjunction with Juvenile Services Center educational staff • Resources of Juvenile Services Center

  18. Cooperative VenturesThe Key to Success… Courts and Schools Working Together

  19. Cooperative Programs Goal: Keeping Kids In School

  20. Computerized Information SharingPart of a Commputerized Court Docketing System Schools, Courts, Office of Family and Children, Probation, Law Enforcement, Juvenile Services Center

  21. Pilot Program • Communities in Schools • LaPorte Community Schools • Michigan City Area Schools • Office of Family and Children

  22. SHOCAP Serious Habitual Juvenile Comprehensive Action Program Comprehensive and Cooperative case management system that enables the juvenile justice system to focus informed attention on youth who repeatedly commit serious crimes.

  23. Courts Can Help • Keep Kids in School • Keep Kids Off the Street • Decrease likelihood of Contact With Criminal Justice System

  24. Joan McCormick Director of Special Education jmccormick@mcas.k12.in.us Administration Building 408 South Carroll Avenue Michigan City, IN 219-873-2000

  25. Kathleen Lang LaPorte Circuit Court 813 Lincolnway, Suite 303 LaPorte, IN 46350 219-362-8610 ext. 512 klang@laportecounty.org

  26. Educational Services Center1921 A StreetLaPorte, Indiana 46350Phone: 219-362-7056Superintendent: Dr. Kenneth Blad kblad@lpcsc.k12.in.us Assistant Superintendent :Dr. Dennis Shawver dshawver@lpcsc.k12.in.us

More Related